United States v. Missouri-KanSas-Texas R.

66 F.2d 919, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2814
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 7, 1933
DocketNo. 795
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 919 (United States v. Missouri-KanSas-Texas R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Missouri-KanSas-Texas R., 66 F.2d 919, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2814 (10th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

LEWIS, Circuit Judge.

The decree in this case dismissed appellant’s bill on final hearing. Appellees, defendants below, are the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company, a Missouri corporation, sued as successor of the Missouri, Kansas & Texas Railway Company, a Kansas corporation, and two surety companies. [920]*920The relief sought was an accounting and the enforcement of a claimed lien for alleged Unpaid royalties under a coal mining lease that had been given on March 20, 1902, to Southwestern Coal and Improvement Company, a West Virginia corporation, on segregated lands of the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations pursuant to the provisions of section 29 of the Act of June 28, 1898, 30 Stat. 495, 505. The lease was executed by both parties, on the part of the two nations by Ainsworth and Carter as their mining trustees. It recited that it was made pursuant to the provisions of said Act of June 28, 1898, the agreement set out in section 29 thereof, “and the rules and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior on May 22, 1900, relative to mining leases in the Choctaw and Chickasaw Nations.” In addition to the provisions inserted in said lease as required by the Act of June 28, 1898, as to which there is no controversy, it also contained the substance, of one of the Secretary’s rules and regulations made by him on May 22,1900, to-wit:

“And the party of the second part agrees and binds itself and its successors or assigns to operate and produce coal from each and every lease of not less than the following quantities: Three thousand tons during the first year from the date of approval of lease; four thousand tons the second year; seven thousand tons the third year; eight thousand tons the fourth year; and fifteen thousand tons the fifth and each succeeding year thereafter. * * *”

It also provided in terms- that the lease should be subject in all respeets to the rules and regulations that had theretofore been adopted by him. The lease sued on is referred to as lease No. 6. No coal was produced under it and no effort was ever made to cancel or avoid it. Five other leases on other segregated lands of the two nations were made and entered into between the same parties on March 20, 1992, each containing the same terms and provisions as this lease. The subsequent regulation was adopted on December 6, 1907, by the Secretary, and reads in this way:

“Each lessee shall produce coal equal to the aggregate of three thousand tons for each lease held by him during the first year from date of approval thereof; four thousand tons during the second year; seven thousand tons during the third year; eight thousand tons during the fourth year; and fifteen thousand tons the fifth and each succeeding year during the term of such lease, or pay royalties as if such amounts had been produced; provided, that any amount paid in excess of that required by actual production shall be held as a credit to be applied in payment of royalties on subsequent actual production, and a failure to meet this requirement will subject the lease or leases, as to which default shall occur, to cancellation.”

The lessee with the approval of the Secretary of date August 12, 1902, assigned all six leases to the Southwestern Development Company, and that company with the approval of the Secretary of date February 18, 1908, assigned them to Robert W. Maguire. The instrument of assignment executed by the Southwestern Development Company bears date April 9, 1906, but its acceptance by Mag'uire was in writing of date November 11, 1907, and it recited that his acceptance was subject to the approval and consent of the Secretary, and that Maguire’s acceptance was not to be effective until the assignment was approved by the Secretary. Maguire gave bond with appellee National Surety Company as surety, conditioned that he would carry out and observe the obligations assumed by him in the six leases, which was also approved by the Secretary on February 18, 1908. Maguire later assigned the six leases with the approval of the Secretary to George T. Cutts, who also gave bond with the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company as his surety, conditioned that he would carry out the obligations assumed by him in the six leases, and that bond was approved August 11, 1920, by the Secretary. Maguire and Cutts were in the employ of the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railway Company, a Kansas corporation, and it is agreed that each held the leases as trustee for the railway company.

Clearly the amended regulation took the place of the prior regulation of May 22,1900, the substance of the latter being embodied in the lease as quoted supra. But had it not been embodied, the lease by reference drew into it all regulations, then and thereafter adopted. Both of these regulations were challenged as invalid in suits instituted in the Circuit Court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma. That court held them void. One of them is reported under title United States ex rel. v. McMurray, 181 F. 723. The other is unpublished, but the opinion is set forth in this record. It is entitled United States v. Degnan & McConnell Coal & Coke Company, et al. The first one was decided on June 6, 1910, and the last one on September 21, 1915. These decisions were accepted by the [921]*921departments. In fact after the last decision the question of appeal was submitted to the Attorney General. He reported to the Secretary of the Interior that after careful consideration he believed the case too weak to promise any chance of success in the appellate court. The first regulation seems to have been wholly abandoned, and no demand on lessees was -thereafter made under the second. Nevertheless some lessees tendered payment under the second, and the tenders were accepted.

In as much as all interested parties accepted the decisions of the Federal court for the Eastern District of Oklahoma and thereafter for many years proceeded in the execution of their contract in accord with those decisions, we do not think it a vital point in disposing of this case that the question of the Secretary’s power or lack of power to establish and enforce either regulation be now passed on. We say this because on the facts hereinafter stated it is our opinion that there was full substantial performance, even if the lessee was bound by the regulations. However, it is our belief that the Secretary exceeded his power in both regulations, that eaeh operated as an amendment of a substantial part of section 29, which prescribed what should be done annually as to eaeh lease that did not produce to save it in full force to the lessee. The regulations eaeh added different and greater requirements for that purpose.

It was the purpose of section 29 of the Act of Juno 28, 1898, to protect the rights of lessees of tribal coal lands that had accrued under prior contracts with the Choctaw and Chiekasaws. It gave to sueh lessees the right to have their leases renewed for terms of thirty years. It provided for payment of royalties on the coal mined. It prescribed the number of acres to be included in each lease. It contains this paragraph:

“All lessees shall pay on each coal or asphalt claim at the rate of one hundred dollars per annum, in advance, for the first and second years; two hundred dollars per annum, in advance, for the third and fourth years; and five hundred dollars for eaeh succeeding year thereafter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 F.2d 919, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-missouri-kansas-texas-r-ca10-1933.